Renal pathology and premortem clinical presentation of Caucasian patients with AIDS: an autopsy study from the era prior to antiretroviral therapy
- PMID: 11571845
- DOI: 10.4414/smw.2001.09698
Renal pathology and premortem clinical presentation of Caucasian patients with AIDS: an autopsy study from the era prior to antiretroviral therapy
Abstract
Principles: Renal disease in patients with HIV infection is becoming increasingly frequent. A particular form of HIV-associated nephropathy (HIVAN) has been found in patients of predominantly African-American and Hispanic origin. However, only limited data are available on renal pathology and premortem clinical presentation of kidney disease in Caucasian patients with AIDS.
Methods: To determine the prevalence, clinical presentation and aetiology of renal disease in Caucasian patients with AIDS at the time of death we have performed a prospective autopsy study with 239 patients who died of AIDS between 1981 and 1989. None of these patients had received HIV-specific antiretroviral therapy. Autopsies and histological analyses were performed on the basis of a standardised protocol. Clinical and laboratory data were gathered according to a uniform questionnaire.
Results: 95% of patients were of Caucasian race. 75% of all patients had extended AIDS (stage IV). Clinical signs of nephropathy prior to death were found in 36% of patients, including proteinuria (18%), abnormal urinary sediment (19.5%), and renal insufficiency (11%). Histopathological lesions were present in 43% of the autopsies, with two or more distinct structural lesions in 12.5% of patients. Of the pathological findings 28% were glomerular or vascular, 33% were non-glomerular, and 29% were combined lesions. The remaining 10% were renal infiltrations of infectious agents or neoplastic tissue. The most common findings were ischaemic changes and vascular scars (18% of patients), as well as pyelo- and interstitial nephritides (12.2%). Importantly, FSGS was present in only 1.7% of patients, and only a single African patient had classical HIVAN.
Conclusions: Renal involvement in HIV disease is very common at the time of death among patients of Caucasian origin. However, classical HIV-associated nephropathy is absent in this population. These findings suggest that kidney disease affects all races and supports the hypothesis that HIVAN is specifically related to non-Caucasian ethnicity. The results reflect renal disease unaffected by HIV-specific antiretroviral therapy.
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